This is a service to help communities propagate to other instances and help with discovery of communities. So far tested and working with PieFed & Lemmy Instances - I suspect it should work with Mbin, but need to test it (Any Mbin Instance volunteers?)

Anyone is free to add their community to the list, but only admins can add their instance to receive communities.

This tool is designed to be simple to use, not requiring fiddling with your instances DNS unlike Lemmy-Federate. Verification for authority to register your instance is done via a message that checks to see if the person confirming is an admin account. It also back-propagates, so on joining your instance will subscribe to all previously added rather than only new ones going forward.

This is my first time launching a service like this, and as such it may not work flawlessly - please share any feedback or suggestions.

https://federation.quokk.au/

  • Quokka@quokk.auOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    8 hours ago

    Thanks, I’ll work on that part tonight.

    Basically you’re signing up your instance (adding a bot or generic user account that will be used to subscribe to the comms shared), and you add your admin username (no other information) so that it can be verified that an instance admin is the one initiating this procedure.

    The bot credentials are so that it can subscribe to communities shared on Threadirator and help them federate to other instances, as discovery of new communities is not automatic requiring at least one account on an instance to manually visit/join it before it will start appearing in feeds.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      8 hours ago

      That makes sense to me then. My worry as a tiny instance owner, is that I’m worried I’ll get flooded with requests, that’s a lot of traffic I’d be signing up for. Larger DBs, more ingress, any thoughts on that?

      • Skavau@piefed.social
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        2 hours ago

        It’s not advisable for people running personal instances, or people running small friend instances for those reasons. The same is true of lemmy-federate if you were to join that.

      • Quokka@quokk.auOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        5
        ·
        8 hours ago

        More communities could mean an increase in traffic, but realistically I feel 90% of Threadiverse communities get 2-3 posts before dying off. Very few remain active or grow big enough to see any impact on performance.